Bryansk pocket On September 30, the
2nd Panzer Group under Colonel General Guderian began its attack against the
Bryansk Front east of Glukhov under the best weather conditions. By around 1:00 p.m. on October 1, the
XXIV motorized Army Corps (AK (mot.)) had broken through the left flank of the
Yermakov Group and advanced on
Sevsk, while the
XXXXVII AK (mot.) advanced on
Karachev.
Stalin and Chief of the General Staff
B. M. Shaposhnikov ordered during the night to cut off the broken-in German formations by flank attacks of the
13th Army (Maj. Gen. Gorodnyansky) and the
Yermakov Group. These isolated counterattacks of individual tank brigades did hit the German XXXXVIII motorized Army Corps used in the flank, whose advance was also slowed, but by the deployment of the
9th Panzer Division, the situation was quickly restored. On October 3, German vanguard formations of the
4th Panzer Division were able to take the
strategically important, but due to omissions of the local commander Lt. Gen. A. A. Tyurin undefended Oryol. The German 2nd Army under Colonel General
Maximilian von Weichs advanced from October 2 against the right flank of the
Bryansk Front and met there bitter resistance of the Soviet
3rd (Maj. Gen.
J. G. Kreizer) and
50th Army (Maj. Gen.
M. P. Petrov). Only with the breakthrough of the 4th Panzer Group through the further north located positions of the Soviet
43rd Army (Maj. Gen.
P. P. Sobennikov, from October 10 Lt. Gen.
Stepan Akimov) did the
2nd Army succeed in bypassing the Soviet front through the resulting gap. By October 5, it finally took
Zhizdra. Almost simultaneously, from the south, the advance of the XXXXVII AK (mot.) via Karachev on Bryansk took place, which on October 6 was taken together with its important Desna bridges. Thus, the supply and communication lines of the
Bryansk Front were cut off. On the Soviet side, greatest confusion prevailed in these days. Already the first German air attacks interrupted the connection between the front staff and the subordinate armies. The operational reserve group at Bryansk could not be used because it was soon attacked by German troops itself. Lt. Gen. Yeryomenko soon recognized the danger threatening his troops. He therefore requested from Chief of the General Staff Shaposhnikov in Moscow the permission to switch to a flexible defense with evasion possibilities. This was refused and Yeryomenko instructed to defend every meter of ground. On October 5, the commander of the
Bryansk Front reported that he was forced to withdraw immediately to the east. However, he received no answer until the morning of October 6. At noon, German tanks appeared near his command post, so he had to flee with three tanks and some infantrymen. Thus, a unified leadership on the Soviet side was temporarily no longer given. The Stavka could no longer transmit the order to withdraw later. Since it assumed that Yeryomenko had fallen, it entrusted the commander of the 50th Army Maj. Gen. M. P. Petrov with the leadership of the front. By October 9, a further advance of the 167th Inf Div (2nd Army) led to a union with the 17th Pz Div (2nd Panzer Army) at Bryansk, whereby the ring around the Soviet 3rd and 13th Armies standing southwest around
Trubchevsk closed. On the same day, Field Marshal von Bock ordered that the clearing of this pocket be transferred to the 2nd Panzer Army. The 2nd Army should take care of the destruction of the enemy standing to the north. In fact, it advanced further, and on October 12, a further pocket around the Soviet 50th Army could be closed at Buyanovichy. However, since both the 2nd Panzer and the 2nd Army had to advance with strong parts further east on order of the OKH and the Commander-in-Chief of the
Army Group Centre without having previously "cleared" the pockets, only few forces were available for the encirclement of the enemy. On October 12, 13 and 14, the Soviet armies broke out. The 3rd Army succeeded at the Navlya, the 13th Army at
Khomutovka. The 50th Army, however, failed under heavy losses at the Resseta. Last Soviet groups succeeded only on October 22/23 in a breakout towards
Belev. In the line Belev–
Fatezh, Yeryomenko collected the
Bryansk Front again between October 17 and 24. However, the troops had suffered enormous losses. Thus, the 13th Army had lost all its artillery and rear services during the breakthrough. In addition, the combat strength of its seven rifle divisions was only 1,500–2,000 men. The five rifle divisions of the 3rd Army had an average combat strength of only 2,000 men. The 50th Army, on the other hand, had been able to save some material. Lt. Gen. Yeryomenko had been wounded on October 12 and subsequently flown out. Maj. Gen. Petrov died during the fighting from the consequences of
gangrene. German reports speak of 108,000 Soviet prisoners alone besides 257 tanks and 763 guns that were destroyed or captured. On the other hand, Lt. Gen. Yeryomenko reported later in his memoirs that the 3rd Soviet Army alone during its breakout had inflicted losses on the German troops of 5,500 dead and wounded, as well as 100 prisoners, 250 vehicles and 50 tanks.
Vyazma pocket On October 2, the 3rd and 4th Panzer Groups as well as the 4th and 9th Armies also advanced to the offensive. The attack of the 4th Panzer Group of Colonel General
Erich Hoepner broke through the Soviet defensive lines of the 43rd Army (Maj. Gen.
P. P. Sobennikov) at the Desna in the morning at 5:30 a.m. The
XL AK (mot.) advanced into the rear area and was able to take
Kirov and
Mosal'sk already on October 4 with the
10th Panzer Division, which was 110 km from the starting position. The next day
Yukhnov also fell. In Moscow, the Stavka initially remained without news from the front. When the aviation forces of the 120th Fighter Regiment reported the advance of motorized columns on Yukhnov, their messages were not believed. The chief of the Moscow aviation forces Colonel Sbytov was even accused by the chief of the
NKVD Lavrentiy Beria of "spreading panic". Col. Gen. Hoepner could therefore operate relatively freely and first turned the XL AK (mot.) northwest towards Vyazma to meet there with the troops of the 3rd Panzer Group. On the left flank thereof, the
XXXXVI AK (mot.) advanced against stronger Soviet resistance. It took
Spas-Demensk on October 4 and was then turned north on instruction of the commander of the 4th Army, Field Marshal
Günther von Kluge, to form the southern part of the planned pocket. The securing of the operations to the east was taken over by the
LVI A.K. (mot.). s of the 4th Army in the Vyazma area The advance of the 3rd Panzer Group under Colonel General
Hermann Hoth proved more difficult. Although it broke through the Soviet positions at the seam of the 19th (Lt. Gen.
Lukin) and 30th Army (Maj. Gen. Khomenko) and established a bridgehead over the
Dnieper on October 3, then Colonel General Konev used his operational group under I.V. Boldin (3 tank brigades; 1 motorized rifle division; 1 rifle division) to seal the German breakthrough. On October 3/4, it attacked at Kholm-Zhirkovsky. The place changed hands several times, but ultimately Lt. Gen. Boldin's troops had to withdraw. According to Soviet figures, 59 German tanks were destroyed. Now, however, supply bottlenecks in fuel occurred at the 3rd Panzer Group, whereby the advance of the armored divisions came to a halt. Only after supplies by the
2nd Air Fleet was the operational readiness restored in the afternoon of October 5. Meanwhile, the 4th and 9th Armies advanced behind the panzer groups to later relieve them at the pocket front. At the same time, however, they also attacked the Soviet positions frontally from the west to narrow the forming pocket. After the counterattacks had failed, Colonel General Konev requested on October 4 to withdraw his front to the line
Gzhatsk-Vyazma. But only in the afternoon of October 5 did the Stavka make a decision. Konev was allowed to withdraw to the line
Rzhev-Vyazma. At the same time, it subordinated the
31st and
32nd Army of the
Reserve Front to him to unify the leadership in the Vyazma area. But these two deeply echeloned formations were already involved in battles, so they failed as real reinforcement of the
Western Front. A similar withdrawal order also reached the
Reserve Front. Thus began a slow and disorganized withdrawal of the Soviet formations. The covering of the withdrawal was entrusted to the Boldin Group and the 31st Army, while the 22nd and
29th Army withdrew to Rzhev and
Staritsa, the
49th and
43rd Army to
Kaluga and
Medyn. Since soon the connection to the Boldin Group and the
31st Army was lost, the leadership of the withdrawal and its covering was transferred to the
32nd Army of Maj. Gen. Vishnevsky. In the encirclement were besides the
Boldin Group the Soviet 19th Army (Lt. Gen. Lukin),
24th Army (Maj. Gen.
Rakutin), 32nd Army (Maj. Gen. Vishnevsky) and the
20th Army (Lt. Gen. Yershakov). However, the troops of the
16th Army (Lt. Gen.
Rokossovsky) had previously been incorporated into the latter, so that in total more than five armies were encircled. Lt. Gen. M.F. Lukin took over the supreme command of the encircled formations. He received only on October 10 and on October 12 each an instruction from the new commander of the
Western Front Army General G.K. Zhukov with the order to break through to the east. However, these radio messages remained unanswered. In the first days, the breakout attempts were directed against the XL and XXXXVI AK (mot.) standing before Vyazma. When this had no success, Lt. Gen. Lukin shifted the attacks to the more unclear terrain in the south, where the heaviest attack took place in the night of October 10/11 against the German
11th Panzer Division. At least two divisions succeeded in breaking out of the encirclement. Initially, four rifle divisions of the
Western Front were ordered there to organize a makeshift defense. At the same time, all retreating formations and all available reserves were thrown into this position. On October 10, in addition to the four rifle divisions, three rifle regiments, five MG battalions and the classes of various military schools had gathered there. Further newly established five MG battalions, five tank brigades and ten anti-tank regiments (each of which had only battalion strength) were on the march. By mid-October, 11 rifle divisions, 16 tank brigades, 40 artillery regiments, in all about 90,000 men, had gathered at Mozhaysk. Gradually, further reinforcements from other front sections as well as Siberian rifle divisions arrived in the Moscow area. From these formations, the Stavka organized two new armies. In the area of
Volokolamsk, a 16th Army was formed again under Lt. Gen. Rokossovsky and at Mozhaysk Maj. Gen.
D. D. Lelyushenko took command of the 5th Army. After Lelyushenko's wounding, however, on October 18 Maj. Gen.
L.A. Govorov became commander of the army. The troops of the 1st Guards Rifle Corps standing at Mtsensk formed the core for the formation of the
26th Army under General A. V. Kurkin. Into the new defense line, parts of the
33rd Army (Lt. Gen.
M. G. Yefremov) could also withdraw at
Naro-Fominsk and parts of the 43rd Army (Gen. Golubev) at
Maloyaroslavets, parts of the 49th Army (Gen. I. G. Zakharkin) at
Kaluga and. , October 1941 Since his troops were numerically weak and battered, Army General Zhukov tried to stabilize the front with all means. In his Order No. 0345 of October 13, 1941, he demanded full commitment from all soldiers and announced: "Cowards and panic-mongers who leave the battlefield, who abandon the occupied positions without permission, who throw away their weapons and equipment, are to be shot on the spot." To compensate for the loss of motor vehicles, he also had all available vehicles in the Moscow area requisitioned. The beginning mud period also favored the Soviet defense. Zhukov quickly recognized that the Wehrmacht formations could only advance on the paved roads. He therefore concentrated the few available formations on the few paved access roads to Moscow at Volokolamsk,
Istra, Mozhaysk, Maloyaroslavets,
Podolsk and
Kaluga. The strongly decimated formations of the
Bryansk Front, which defended the road Oryol-
Tula with emphasis, proceeded similarly. At the same time, the commander of the Rear Services of the Red Army, General A.V. Khrulev, ordered to form supply formations with panje wagons, since the mud also brought the Soviet supply to a halt and supply aircraft were not available in sufficient number. This measure helped to overcome the supply crises on the Soviet side.
German pursuit operations Even during the fights for the pockets, the German troops proceeded to exploit the gaps they had punched in the Soviet lines. This corresponded to the plans of the OKH and the Commander-in-Chief of the
Army Group Centre. Thus, Field Marshal von Bock had ordered the 2nd Panzer Group immediately after the capture of Oryol on October 4 "to take possession of
Mtsensk ... " and if possible to advance towards Tula. The Stavka had meanwhile taken measures to prevent a German breakthrough via Tula towards Moscow. It relocated 5,500 soldiers to Mtsensk by air transport. Other reserves also arrived there. When finally the 5th and 6th Guards Rifle Divisions, the 4th and 11th Tank Brigades, the 5th Airborne Corps, the 36th Motorcycle Rifle Regiment and a worker regiment from Tula were assembled at Mtsensk, these formations were summarized as
1st Guards Rifle Corps under the command of Lt. Gen. D.D. Lelyushenko (who took over the 5th Army a few days later). The pocket battles themselves also delayed the German advance. According to an army group order of October 4, the pockets should only be cleared by a part of the 2nd Panzer Group, but soon it showed that the 2nd Army was also necessary for this. The breakout attempts of the
Bryansk Front also prevented a reinforcement of the German pursuit forces in the following days. At Vyazma, it was important to relieve the 3rd and 4th Panzer Groups, which had closed the pocket on October 7, by the infantry forces of the 4th and 9th Armies and thus make them available for a further advance towards Moscow. But these armies advanced only slowly due to tenacious Soviet resistance. After the closure of the pocket, OKH and the High Command of the
Army Group Centre were of the opinion that the enemy had no significant forces left for the defense of Moscow. On October 7, Colonel General Halder and Field Marshal von Bock met at the headquarters of the army group. It was decided to seize the opportunity immediately. Field Marshal von Bock was convinced that he was strong enough to clear the pockets and
at the same time advance on Moscow. Only about the direction of the pursuit was there disagreement. In the OKH, one was of the opinion that the enemy was so weak that it was sufficient to pursue him only with a part of the forces towards Moscow. Hitler demanded the capture of
Kursk by the 2nd Panzer Army. In addition, the 3rd Panzer Group and parts of the 9th Army should be diverted north to destroy the Soviet forces in the area of
Ostashkov in cooperation with the
Army Group North. Field Marshal von Bock did not agree with this splitting of his forces, but the next day a Führer order fixed the turning of the 3rd Panzer Group as soon as the pocket battles allowed it. The
XLI AK (mot.) therefore shortly thereafter advanced on Kalinin. The 4th Panzer Group remained bound to the front of the Vyazma pocket with its XXXVI and XL AK (mot.) until mid-October. Thus, finally, only the
LVII AK (mot.) (19th and 20th Pz Div 3rd Inf Div (mot.)) as well as the XII and XIII AK were available for the pursuit to Moscow. On October 11, the German pursuit forces could first take Medyn and the next day Kaluga, with which they had already broken into the Mozhaysk defense line. They could exploit these successes to also take
Tarusa and bypass Maloyaroslavets. Thereafter, heavy fighting developed in the area of
Borovsk between the LVII AK (mot.) and the Soviet 110th Rifle Division and 151st Motorized Rifle Brigade, which lasted until October 16. The Germans are said to have lost 20 tanks alone, before the Soviets had to withdraw to Naro-Fominsk. After Maloyaroslavets had also fallen, the Soviet 43rd Army had to withdraw behind the Nara on October 18. North of that, Mozhaysk itself fell to the German troops after a six-day fight and the loss of allegedly 60 tanks. Although Kalinin had also fallen on October 14, the German forces could hardly advance further against the stiffening resistance of the Soviet formations, as on the German side, sufficient pursuit forces could not yet be freed due to the ongoing pocket battles. These could only start the pursuit with mass from October 15. But by then, especially the armored formations had suffered sensitive losses. The 6th Pz Div had only 60 tanks left, the 20th Pz Div had lost 43 of its 283 tanks. The 4th Pz Div had only 38 tanks left after the lossy fights against the 1st Guards Rifle Corps before Mtsensk. The
Army Group Centre had lost 47,430 soldiers and 1,791 officers in the time from the beginning of the operations to October 17. The weakened formations encountered in their pursuit a motivated enemy in built positions. Not a few units reported the "hardest fights since the beginning of the Eastern Campaign" (war diary of the LVII AK (mot.)). Soon the bad weather conditions would also hinder the German operations.
Stalling of the offensive On October 6/7, the first snow fell in the area of the 2nd Panzer Army, which quickly muddied the paths. In the next night, heavy autumn rain fell in the entire area of the
Army Group Centre. Thus, the time of the Russian
Rasputitsa ("roadlessness") was ushered in, which greatly hindered the German operations in the following time. In the headquarters of the
Army Group Centre, it was noted already on October 9: "Movement of the armored units off the main roads is not possible at present due to bottomless and bad roads as a result of the bad weather. Thereby also fuel difficulties." The Rasputitsa affected the conduct of operations only from October 13, since from this time the supply with fuel and ammunition could no longer be ensured. This state, as the headquarters of the 2nd Army noted on October 18, would last "as long as the supply is not rebuilt". The 4th Army also could not advance further, as it was itself pressed by constant Soviet counterattacks. It stopped the advance of its right flank on October 16. In the area of the 9th Army and 3rd Panzer Group, the formations were dependent on the Vyazma-Moscow highway, but this route was heavily damaged by numerous demolitions, bomb damage and overcrowding. Finally, on October 19, the
entire 5th Infantry Division had to be used for repair work on the highway. In addition, the 3rd Panzer Group was also forced into the defense by counterattacks of the
Kalinin Front. The formations of the 2nd Air Fleet were also increasingly unable to intervene in the fighting due to the bad weather. Field Marshal von Bock noted, after practically all attack movements had to be stopped on October 19/20, on October 25 in his diary: The only terrain gains could still be achieved in the area of the
Bryansk Front, and this only because its right flank was no longer covered by the German successes against the
Western Front. To close the almost 60 km wide gap, the Stavka therefore ordered on October 24 to withdraw the armies of the
Bryansk Front to the line Dubna-Plavsk-Verkhovye-Livny-Kastornoye. This withdrawal began on October 26 and was largely completed four days later. When the 2nd Panzer Army took up the pursuit and from October 29 tried to take the city of Tula, it met strong Soviet resistance of the 50th Army there. From this, some fights developed, especially in the flank of the Panzer Army, which lasted until November 7, but ran without result. In view of the hopeless situation, Field Marshal von Bock gave the order on November 1, 1941, "that for the time being no further advance will be made on a large scale, but that everything will be prepared for the attack and supply difficulties will be remedied as quickly as possible, so that with the onset of good weather (frost) the advance can be made immediately." Thus, the German "Operation Typhoon" had practically come to an end. == Consequences of the battle ==